There are two kinds of mistakes you are making; mistakes that are creating errors and mistakes that are affecting readability
Both instances of the phrase [i] should be removed. I believe that you may be thinking it has something to do with iteration or tuples, but that is part of the reason you are getting errors:
myArray1 = [0]
myArray2 = [1]
while myArray2 < 700:
myArray1, myArray2 = b, myArray1+myArray2
print(myArray2)
the other part of the reason you are getting errors is because of the variable b. You don't declare it and it does not belong. This code will iterate correctly if you switch out b with myArray2:
myArray1 = [0]
myArray2 = [1]
while myArray2 < 700:
myArray1, myArray2 = myArray2, myArray1+myArray2
print(myArray2)
then there are some legibility issues. I would change the phrase myArray1 and 2 to a and b respectively. First because it is just too long; second because in python it is called lists, not arrays; third because you are referring to integers, not lists or arrays:
a = [0]
b = [1]
while b < 700:
a, b = b, a+b
print(b)
then, the variables that were myArray1 and 2, but are now a and b; those are integers and they do not need to be expressed as single object lists. so get rid of the brackets around them:
a = 0
b = 1
while b < 700:
a, b = b, a+b
print(b)
Then, the last phrase in this code says print(b). If you have it printing b then the fibonacci sequence you get is missing its first 1. It will read (on separate lines of course) 1,2,3,5,8,13 and so on. It should read 1,1,2,3,5,8,13. You are missing the first 1. So print(b) needs to be changed to print(a):
a = 0
b = 1
while b < 700:
a, b = b, a+b
print(a)
then, if you are expressing more than one variable you can just list all the variables separated by commas equal to all the values separated by commas like this:
a,b,c,d = 1,2,3,4
so for your code that would translate to:
a,b = 0,1
while b < 700:
a, b = b, a+b
print(a)
then get rid of that extra space, white space means something in python, though here it doesn't really make a difference:
a,b = 0,1
while b < 700:
a, b = b, a+b
print(a)
So all of this so far has just been enough to get you to your original problem: you are getting an iteration (each consecutive value on a seperate line). Below is how you can get a list to any number n:
def fibo(n):
fibo_list = []
a,b = 0,1
while b < n:
a,b = b,a+b
fibo_list.append(a)
print(fibo_list)
hope that helps